There are a now a number of Blondies under construction around
the world, including a couple in Australia and also Vermont. These photos are of
the second completed Blondie that I know about, built by Peter Simmons in
Minnesota.

The builder made one minor change that I wholeheartedly endorse.
He moved the daggerboard case off to the side, clearing the best part of the
boat for people and stuff. My old Windsprint had a similar arrangement that I
thought was wonderful. Most people have an aversion to asymmetry. Only until
people sail a boat so equipped they realize it doesn't really make a difference.
Peter also fabbed a nifty removable rowing thwart.

Here's what he had to say about her:

"Here are a few pics of the
Blondie I built
this past summer. I don't have any shots of her
sailing, but I am very impressed with her sailing
qualities. She tends to stay almost straight up and
down, even in stiff - 12-18 mph - winds, and would be
even faster with something superior to my first ever
sailmaking effort. I offset the dagger board case as
we discussed, and this created a lot more interior
volume. I made a removable rowing thwart which has a
tab that fits into the dagger board case and rests on
a narrow sill on the opposite side. All very
satisfactory. Great design! No surprises in the
build, but a boat of surprising ability in the water!"

The prototype Blondie was built and sailed by John Burgh in
Indiana.

He sent this report:

hi john
the squeeze and I managed to get Blondie out today
for her maiden voyage. It was 45 degrees here, and
winds WNW at 10mph. Wind-chill...I don't even want to
know, Errol said it was freakin' cold out there! I
don't know where to start because she was everything
you predicted and a lot more.
I took her out by myself first, just to make sure
everything was OK and to give the squeeze a chance to
get a couple of flyby photos. Blondie is very stable
in the water, not to mention dry...got a few gusts in
the 15-20 mph range...and by yourself (well I did have
Errol with me) she really gets up and boogies, doesn't
heel much either, really surprised me there.
After about 20 minutes of windward tacking back and
forth across the river the squeeze was starting to
look like the 9yr old left out of a pizza party, so I
went and picked her up, because it was her turn to
drive.
The boat does fantastic with 2 grownups in her at
about 320lbs total, (Errol doesn't weigh anything).
After about an hour and a half on the water Errol
started whining that he had to "go", I told him he
should've gone before we got in the boat, so I let go
of the sheet and the rudder to see what would happen
and Blondie politely pointed head into the wind and
just stayed there.
So, Errol told the Squeeze, stay on the windward side
of the boat, because Errol needs to visit the lee side
of the boat. It's a good thing there's never a fish
cop around when you don't really need one, because
Errol would've got busted for hanging it over the lee
side of the boat. But it was light work so everything
went fine, don't know if I'd try this maneuver with
heavy work or not. So this should give you some idea
of how stable Blondie is in the water with 2 people in
it...
So my guess is, you've got a real world beater on your
hands here just as soon as the word gets out on what a
fantastic boat Blondie really is. (you'll be the guy
with the "this plan has been downloaded 5 jillion
times next to the button". And all those guys like us
that have a D4 or want a D4 should really be thinking
Ruebenesque blondes. Because Blondie has more room,
more capacity, takes less materials to build not to
mention extremely easy to build.
Errol and his squeeze-aka John and April Rose Burgh